Careers

Is it easy to attract and retain scientific talent for biotech on Long Island? It depends on who you talk to. In some cases, companies find it relatively easy to attract researchers......

In the early 1990s, a Long Island law firm, Scully, Scott, Murphy and Presser, worked with Stony Brook University to set up a legal internship for science PhDs. The internship offered training and new career...

In the early 1990s, the Stony Brook Center for Biotechnology launched an internship program for science PhDs. Young researchers would work with local law firms to learn about patent law and figure out if this...

Not everyone who earns a STEM PhD finds a postdoc and then a faculty position. And not every PhD wants to go down that path. Stony Brook organic chemistry PhD Pam Ancona, now head of...

If you want to keep biotech talent on Long Island over the long term, you have to think about how new companies might attract talented staff. You also have to think about where these people...

What can universities do for life sciences graduate students who might be interested in a career in biotech, or who might simply want to know more about the industry? Stony Brook’s Center for Biotechnology developed...

How easy is it to attract and retain scientific talent at a biotech company on Long Island? Are there any peculiarities of the region that make this more or less difficult than elsewhere in the...

Collaboration with industry can offer scientists more than money for research or a chance to see their work find concrete application. For postdocs, working at a biotech company can be a way of squaring the...

Many scientists in fields with biomedical applications describe a point in their education where they considered medicine as a potential career path. For those who ultimately decided to pursue a PhD instead, the reasons for...

Many biologists who ended up involved in biotechnology considered medicine as a potential career. Future researchers decide against going to medical school for all kinds of reasons. For Jerry Yin, formerly affiliated with CSHL and...

Plants need nitrogen to grow, but a significant portion of the nitrogen in fertilizers is not absorbed by the soil or used by the growing plants. Rather, it washes away into waterways, rivers, and the ocean. This in turn has had devastating effects on marine life. In some areas, excessive nitrogen in the oceans has caused algae blooms that kill wildlife, make it dangerous for people to consume fish or shellfish or in some cases even swim in affected waters. This problem isn’t limited to poorer countries. Nitrogen pollution is a serious problem here on Long Island. In our case, the nitrogen comes primarily from septic tanks and cesspools, although nitrogen from agricultural fertilizers also plays a role. Nitrogen pollution in the waters around Long Island has hampered fishing, made it dangerous to eat seafood from some areas, and caused environmental changes that make coastal areas more prone to flooding.